Driving Innovation with Realistic Simulation Volume 2

Driving Innovation with Realistic Simulation Volume 2

DRIVING INNOVATION WITH REALISTIC SIMULATION VOLUME 2 HPC Transportation & Mobility Driving Innovation with Realistic Simulation Content Leveraging realistic simulation for global validation, proven performance 3 Dana’s engineers team up to accelerate product design with 4 simulation lifecycle management Major automotive supplier realizes up to 25 percent time-savings in their computer-aided engineering projects Honda leverages simulation to meet changing market needs 7 Using CAE to optimize design parameters earlier in the development cycle Eaton ensures the reliability of critical supercharger components with fe-safe 9 Combining traditional FE stress analysis with modern fatigue analysis methods to improve performance High fidelity anti-lock brake system simulation using Abaqus and Dymola 11 Using co-simulation to perform to perform realistic system-level simulation Simulation of airbag deployment using the coupled Eulerian-Lagrangian method 14 in Abaqus/Explicit Correlating test and simulation to predict realistic performance www.3ds.com/simulia 2 Transportation & Mobility Leveraging Realistic Simulation for Global Validation, Proven Performance HOW DO INDUSTRY LEADERS DRIVE INNOVATION, OPTIMIZE PERFORMANCE, AND REDUCE WARRANTY & RECALL RISKS? With innovation as a continuing driving force for how companies increase their competitive advantage, many OEMs and automotive suppliers are taking a holistic look at how they can streamline their product development. Improving vehicle performance and quality not only helps save cycle time and reduce costs, it also increases innovative capacity. Leading automotive companies are gaining strategic competitive advantages by adopting simulation solutions that free up valuable time & resources to innovate better vehicles. These solutions support better testing, virtual and physical prototype management and enhanced verification & validation to greatly increase product performance and quality. Volume 2 of this eBook series explores how automotive OEMs and automotive suppliers adopted Dassault Systèmes’ 3DEXPERIENCE® platform and its Global Validation, Proven Performance industry solution experience to increase their designers innovative capacity. By integrating realistic simulation into their processes, these leaders have enhanced product quality, saved cycle time and reduced development costs: Manage Simulation Processes and Data Balance Performance Requirements Develop Lightweight Components Save Time with Upfront Analysis Meet Changing Market Needs Evaluate Durability and Reliability Calibrate Simulations with Test Results www.3ds.com/simulia 3 Transportation & Mobility says Frank Popielas, senior manager of advanced engineering Dana’s Engineers Team Up in the Dana Power Technologies Group and head of CAE (computer-aided engineering) for Dana. “This meant a shift in to Accelerate Product Design focus, from how to control costs and manufacture efficiently, to how to innovate. Obviously all these need to be integrated. with Simulation Lifecycle But if you focus solely on costs, product quality will go down. Management As an engineering-driven company, we look at how to improve a product from a quality and function perspective. Innovation, Major automotive supplier realizes up to 25 supported by the right engineering tools, made our company percent time-savings in their computer-aided more competitive.” engineering projects Many automotive suppliers struggled during the recession, and unemployment rates rose. However, since Dana had already developed substantial in-house CAE and high-performance computing (HPC) resources, the company made a point of retaining their design engineering teams. “During the downturn, we kept our focus on CAE,” says Popielas. “We knew that, in the long run, the investment would be worth it.” Engineering return-on-investment with CAE Indeed, CAE has proved invaluable to the company. Dana’s products include a vast range of gaskets (cylinder head, exhaust, intake manifold, etc.), cam covers, and heat exchangers; mechanical and electrical components; driveline components and assemblies (axles, driveshafts, gear boxes, etc.) and more. Materials range from metals to rubber to plastics to fiber-based. Production processes include casting, injection molding, heat treatment, forming, magnetic pulse welding, etc. “Because we make pretty much everything around the automotive powertrain and drivetrain, our portfolio involves The recent revival of the U.S. automotive industry is a success huge complexity,” says Popielas. “To ensure quality when story on many levels. Bridge loans granted by the government designing our products, we need to look at everything that enabled some automakers to restructure. Tightened fuel- can impact them, including stress, strain, fatigue, molding, economy and pollution standards spurred new R&D. An improving economic climate released pent-up demand for new cars—and this time Detroit was ready with fuel-efficient, eye- catching models that brought buyers back to the showrooms. The Big Three (Ford, GM and Chrysler) were on the path to recovery. As the automakers’ business picked up again, so did that of their suppliers. Dana Holding Corporation—a U.S.-based, Tier 1 global supplier of axles, driveshafts, sealing and thermal- management products, off-highway transmissions, and service parts—saw a strong turnaround in revenues and margins. While their customers’ recovery was certainly a major contributor to these results, credit for Dana’s rebound also goes to an evolution in mindset that helped keep the company on track through tough times. Figure 1. Founded in 1904, Ohio-based Dana now has 24,000 employees in 26 countries. The company’s global brands include Spicer “We underwent a cultural change at Dana from a mainly cost/ drivetrain products, Victor Reinz sealing products and Long thermal manufacturing-driven company to an engineering-driven one,” products. Source: SIMULIA Community News www.3ds.com/simulia 4 Transportation & Mobility gas, oil and cooling flow, air and oil separation, thermal distribution and, of course, their complex interactions. CAE is the toolkit that supports the development of our products in the engineering space. Simulation enables us to verify and validate—virtually—product functionality.” While real-world testing remains the ultimate proof of that functionality, Dana’s extensive use of CAE has enabled the company to do less and less physical testing in recent years. “Simulation speeds up the product development process, captures data that can be used to optimize the product and gives our engineers more freedom to innovate,” says Popielas. “Innovation is critical for us, but it still has to be cost-effective. Our CAE resources help minimize, or even neutralize, many time-consuming tasks of the past, such as creating drawings, prototyping, and going through extensive physical testing for each design iteration. CAE takes out costs across the board for us.” Figure 2. Sample set showing the variety of different CAE software programs Dana uses for simulation during the design and development Dana’s CAE arsenal is extensive (see Figure 2). Among the of its products. The company’s deployment of SIMULIA SLM provides an tools are Abaqus from SIMULIA, Dassault Systèmes, the open environment supporting multiple technologies so they can use applications that best support their needs, as well as collaborate with company’s longtime finite element analysis (FEA) solver for internal teams, customers and their own suppliers. realistic simulation; Hypermesh from Altair, Abaqus/CAE and Simlab for preprocessing; StarCCM+ from CD-adapco and FlowVision from Capvidia for computational fluid dynamics SLM enables a company to define and manage simulation (CFD); MoldFlow for molding simulation; and fe-safeTM for methods, models and procedures (scenarios). “When you get fatigue. Isight, also from SIMULIA, is used for optimization into virtual engineering, in order to not waste your investment tasks such as Design of Experiments (DOE). you have to have a tool in place that manages data, process and development,” says Popielas. While continuing individual component analysis, Dana has also made the step into simulating subsystems, complete systems, Historically, CAE at Dana was the purview of individual experts and global models. “As the company transitions to full systems who would select from among multiple software tools to engineering in the virtual world, we expect to add even more perform everything from design data preparation to simulation software codes in the future,” says Popielas. execution to results analysis, storing both inputs and solutions mostly on their local hard drives. This made collaboration Helping CAE tools work together with Simulation difficult, and coordinating larger projects a major challenge. Lifecycle Management Communication about design changes was also an issue, with the experts sometimes running simulations on outdated data As the simulation process at Dana matured, the challenge files. The situation was further complicated by Dana’s growth for the engineering group shifted from how to accurately strategy of dispersing teams globally in order to keep closer predict real product performance, to other pressing issues: contact with their geographically diverse customers. How to more effectively connect simulation with the rest of the business and decision making processes. How to improve “An individual product validation can involve thousands of collaboration with both the customer and among Dana’s global gigabytes

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